This subspecies is insufficiently known, especially as to geographic range; probably it occupies a considerable range in the Tropical Life-zone along the eastern base of the Andes. The three females, two from Ambo and one from Huanuco, come from a much higher altitude than do the two males and the climate is said to be arid at Ambo and Huanuco. The skulls of the females are 62 per cent lighter and correspondingly smaller in measurements, than those of males. This difference is more than that found in any other South American weasel and it may be that the females are of a subspecies other thanhelleri.
The type specimen has a broad skull with major proportions strikingly like those ofMustela stolzmanni. Possibly the similar climatic conditions under which the two live have left their impress in similar fashion in this part of each of the two species. The teeth, tympanic bullae, and certain other parts of the skull are, however, so differently proportioned as to show that the skulls represent two species. The referred male has a much longer skull than the type specimen and the relative proportions of breadth and depth of the two skulls differ widely. Judging from large series of weasels examined from localities outside the range ofM. f. helleri, the two skulls probably represent almost the maximum of individual variation occurring in one subspecies.
The dark color is as might be expected sincehelleriinhabits the humid Tropical Zone.
None of the five skulls shows signs of having had the frontal sinuses infested by parasites.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 5, all in the Field Museum of Natural History.Perú: 3500 ft., Hacienda Buena Vista, Río Chinchao, 1; 3000 ft., Hacienda San Antonio, Río Chinchao, 1; Huanuco, 1; Ambo, 2.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 5, all in the Field Museum of Natural History.
Perú: 3500 ft., Hacienda Buena Vista, Río Chinchao, 1; 3000 ft., Hacienda San Antonio, Río Chinchao, 1; Huanuco, 1; Ambo, 2.
Long-tailed Weasel
Plates27,28,29,39and40
Mustela agilisTschudi, Fauna Peruana, p. 110, 1844; Gray, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1865:113, 1865; Taczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1874:311, 1874; Taczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1881:648, 1881; Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:104; April 28, 1916; Thomas, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 58-224, 1920.Mustela macrura, Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:103, April 28, 1916.Mustela frenata agilis, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939.
Mustela agilisTschudi, Fauna Peruana, p. 110, 1844; Gray, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1865:113, 1865; Taczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1874:311, 1874; Taczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1881:648, 1881; Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:104; April 28, 1916; Thomas, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 58-224, 1920.
Mustela macrura, Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:103, April 28, 1916.
Mustela frenata agilis, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939.
Type.—No type specimen, or type locality more restricted than cold, barren highlands of the Cordillera [referring to Perú] designated.Range.—High, barren Cordillera of Perú (see Tschudi, orig. descr.); as here restricted, Temperate Life-zone and higher in western Andes and intermountain valleys of Perú. See figure29on page221.Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela frenata macruraby lighter color (Chocolate, tone 2 rather than 3, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) of upper parts; length of upper tooth-rows, in females, less than 13; inside length of P4 more than 4.6; fromM. f. aureoventrisby smaller teeth (maximum size just given foragilis); fromM. f. boliviensisby lighter color, upper parts being Chocolate, tone 2, pl. 343, rather than tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 (Oberthür and Dauthenay).Description.—Size.—Male: The stuffed skin of an adult, from Lima, measures: Total length, 460; length of tail, 125; length of hind foot, 45.7. A skin alone from Huarochirí has a body, as now stuffed, 277 mm. long. The tail is missing and the bones of the hind feet have been removed.Female: The mounted specimen, no. 565, Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat., yields measurements, taken by me, as follows: Total length, 250; length of tail, 75; length of hind foot, 32.5. The female, no. 21147, from Macate, measures, 300, 102, 34.Externals.—Longest facial vibrissae, either dark-or light-colored and extending beyond ear; carpal vibrissae either dark-or light-colored and extending to apical pad of fifth digit; hairiness of foot soles as shown in figure20.Color.—Tschudi's description of the color is, in substance, as follows: Head, back and tail reddish gray; base of hair gray, followed by broader grayish-yellow ring and then reddish-brown tip; nose simply dark brown or upper lips edged with white; throat, breast, belly and higher parts of inner sides of extremities whitish gray, at times wholly gray, bases of hairs always gray; feet darker than body, almost chestnut brown; tail darker on tip than at base; ears externally dark brown, internally whitish.No. 565 possibly somewhat faded from exposure to light, has all the upper parts near (14´j) Ochraceous-Tawny or Cinnamon, and tone 4 of Oberthür and Dauthenay, plate 323; posterior half of each upper lip white; no other white facial markings present; dark spot at each angle of mouth (one spot confluent with color of upper parts); tip of tail probably black (tip missing); underparts white, belly probably originally with slight tinge of yellow or allied color; color of underparts extending distally on forelegs to feet and onto upper sides of toes and on hind legs to just above heels. Least width of color of underparts equal to about one-fourth of greatest width of color of upper parts.No. 21147, subadult, from Macate, has a white band confluent with the underparts extending anterodorsally anterior to each ear and the posterior third of each upper lip white. Top of head near (n) Mars Brown, and Carbon Brown, tone 3 (pl. 342, Ober. and Dauth.); tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (16"j) Tawny-Olive, and Chocolate (tone 2, of pl. 343 of Ober. and Dauth.) or Raw Umber (tone 3 of pl. 301 of Ober. and Dauth.); anterior half of underparts, including posterior sides of forelegs and antipalmar faces of forefeet, white; remainder of underparts tinged with Warm Buff and extended on posterior legs almost to ankles.No. 8.1.10.1., male adult, from Lima, is also light colored, and as described in no. 21147, except that left side of head has a white spot rather than bar; posterior eighth of each upper lip white; white frontonasal spot present, 11 x 11 mm.; antipalmar faces of forefeet spotted with brown color of upper parts; color of underparts extending distally on hind legs along medial side of foot to point halfway between heel and tip of inner toe.No. 13257 from Huarochirí in color and color pattern closely resembles no. 21147. It differs from no. 21147 in slightly lighter color of upper parts, entirely white underparts, less extension of color of underparts onto forefeet, few white hairs instead of white band in front of each ear; color of underparts more restricted.In each of the four specimens, the least width of the underparts, expressed as a percentage of the upper parts, is as follows: no. 13257, 11 per cent; no. 21147, 29 per cent; no. 565, 31 per cent; no. 8.1.10.1., nineteen per cent.Skull and teeth.—Male (based on no. 8.1.10.1.): See measurements and plates27-29. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight 4.1 grams; basilar length, 42.5; zygomatic breadth more than distance between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; mastoid breadth less than postpalatal length; tympanic bullae shorter than rostrum.Female (based on no. 21147): See measurements and plates39and40. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight (no. 21147, subadult), 1.5 grams; basilar length, 35.2; least width of palate less than outside length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as combined width of five upper incisors; no. 565 answers to the same description but differs from no. 21147 in greater basilar length and larger tympanic bullae which are slightly more projected, at their anterior margins, from the braincase.
Type.—No type specimen, or type locality more restricted than cold, barren highlands of the Cordillera [referring to Perú] designated.
Range.—High, barren Cordillera of Perú (see Tschudi, orig. descr.); as here restricted, Temperate Life-zone and higher in western Andes and intermountain valleys of Perú. See figure29on page221.
Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela frenata macruraby lighter color (Chocolate, tone 2 rather than 3, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) of upper parts; length of upper tooth-rows, in females, less than 13; inside length of P4 more than 4.6; fromM. f. aureoventrisby smaller teeth (maximum size just given foragilis); fromM. f. boliviensisby lighter color, upper parts being Chocolate, tone 2, pl. 343, rather than tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 (Oberthür and Dauthenay).
Description.—Size.—Male: The stuffed skin of an adult, from Lima, measures: Total length, 460; length of tail, 125; length of hind foot, 45.7. A skin alone from Huarochirí has a body, as now stuffed, 277 mm. long. The tail is missing and the bones of the hind feet have been removed.
Female: The mounted specimen, no. 565, Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat., yields measurements, taken by me, as follows: Total length, 250; length of tail, 75; length of hind foot, 32.5. The female, no. 21147, from Macate, measures, 300, 102, 34.
Externals.—Longest facial vibrissae, either dark-or light-colored and extending beyond ear; carpal vibrissae either dark-or light-colored and extending to apical pad of fifth digit; hairiness of foot soles as shown in figure20.
Color.—Tschudi's description of the color is, in substance, as follows: Head, back and tail reddish gray; base of hair gray, followed by broader grayish-yellow ring and then reddish-brown tip; nose simply dark brown or upper lips edged with white; throat, breast, belly and higher parts of inner sides of extremities whitish gray, at times wholly gray, bases of hairs always gray; feet darker than body, almost chestnut brown; tail darker on tip than at base; ears externally dark brown, internally whitish.
No. 565 possibly somewhat faded from exposure to light, has all the upper parts near (14´j) Ochraceous-Tawny or Cinnamon, and tone 4 of Oberthür and Dauthenay, plate 323; posterior half of each upper lip white; no other white facial markings present; dark spot at each angle of mouth (one spot confluent with color of upper parts); tip of tail probably black (tip missing); underparts white, belly probably originally with slight tinge of yellow or allied color; color of underparts extending distally on forelegs to feet and onto upper sides of toes and on hind legs to just above heels. Least width of color of underparts equal to about one-fourth of greatest width of color of upper parts.
No. 21147, subadult, from Macate, has a white band confluent with the underparts extending anterodorsally anterior to each ear and the posterior third of each upper lip white. Top of head near (n) Mars Brown, and Carbon Brown, tone 3 (pl. 342, Ober. and Dauth.); tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (16"j) Tawny-Olive, and Chocolate (tone 2, of pl. 343 of Ober. and Dauth.) or Raw Umber (tone 3 of pl. 301 of Ober. and Dauth.); anterior half of underparts, including posterior sides of forelegs and antipalmar faces of forefeet, white; remainder of underparts tinged with Warm Buff and extended on posterior legs almost to ankles.
No. 8.1.10.1., male adult, from Lima, is also light colored, and as described in no. 21147, except that left side of head has a white spot rather than bar; posterior eighth of each upper lip white; white frontonasal spot present, 11 x 11 mm.; antipalmar faces of forefeet spotted with brown color of upper parts; color of underparts extending distally on hind legs along medial side of foot to point halfway between heel and tip of inner toe.
No. 13257 from Huarochirí in color and color pattern closely resembles no. 21147. It differs from no. 21147 in slightly lighter color of upper parts, entirely white underparts, less extension of color of underparts onto forefeet, few white hairs instead of white band in front of each ear; color of underparts more restricted.
In each of the four specimens, the least width of the underparts, expressed as a percentage of the upper parts, is as follows: no. 13257, 11 per cent; no. 21147, 29 per cent; no. 565, 31 per cent; no. 8.1.10.1., nineteen per cent.
Skull and teeth.—Male (based on no. 8.1.10.1.): See measurements and plates27-29. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight 4.1 grams; basilar length, 42.5; zygomatic breadth more than distance between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; mastoid breadth less than postpalatal length; tympanic bullae shorter than rostrum.
Female (based on no. 21147): See measurements and plates39and40. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight (no. 21147, subadult), 1.5 grams; basilar length, 35.2; least width of palate less than outside length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as combined width of five upper incisors; no. 565 answers to the same description but differs from no. 21147 in greater basilar length and larger tympanic bullae which are slightly more projected, at their anterior margins, from the braincase.
To judge from the skull of the female from Macate and the skull of the male from Lima, the skull and teeth ofagilisare smaller than in any other South American subspecies ofMustela frenata, exceptM. f. boliviensis.
Remarks.—Tschudi almost certainly used the nameMustela agilisin a composite sense. His statement (see quoted matter below) about the marked variation in color of this species, as represented by the skins carried by the Indian women as purses, indicates that the forms here designated asMustela macrura,M. helleriand possibly others additional to the one here calledagiliswere included by him under the nameMustela agilis. Taczanowski took account ofMustela agiliswhen he described other species from Perú. Allen (1916:104) and Thomas (1920:224) were not convinced thatMustela agilisandMustela macrurawere distinct species or subspecies.
Search on August 28, 1937, in the Musée d'Histoire Naturelle, at Neuchatel, Switzerland, by Mr. Théodore Delachaux, assistant there, and the writer, revealed no trace of weasels from Tschudi's collection, although some other specimens of mammals that he figured in the "Fauna Peruana" are preserved in that Museum. Not only were the collections of specimens examined but the new catalogue and old catalogue of mammals were vainly searched for mention of weasels deposited by Tschudi. Later, at the British Museum of Natural History, on p, 105 of a personal notebook, of the late Mr. Oldfield Thomas, record was found of his fruitless search for the same specimens ofMustelain May, 1902, at Neuchatel.
Although Tschudi certainly used the nameMustela agilisin a composite sense, as subspecies are at present understood, his description most nearly applies to the light-colored animals from western Perú—the lightest colored of any South American weasels seen. They are of approximately the same color as North American subspecies inhabiting semiarid regions, for exampleMustela frenata longicaudaof the Great Plains.
Another, but in my opinion less weighty, justification for applying Tschudi's nameagilisto these light-colored weasels of western Perú is that by one line of reasoning, Taczanowski in namingmacrura(jelskiiis a synonym of it) from farther eastward in Perú, and that Hall in naminghellerifrom still farther eastward, andboliviensisto the southeastward, geographically restricted the application of the nameagilis. Hall's action did this because he recognized geographic variation and employed the subspecies concept. Taczanowski, however, proposed his namemacrurafor a kind of animal which he indicated was specifically (as opposed to subspecifically) distinct fromagilisand his account (1881:649) ofjelskiiindicates that he thoughtMustela agilisTschudi might occur in the same place as the animals which he named as new kinds. Thus, we can not credit Taczanowski withintentto restrict the nameagilisgeographically, even though later authors may choose to rule that his naming ofmacrurain effect did so restrict the application ofMustela agilisTschudi.
The equivalents in millimeters given by Allen (1916:104) for Tschudi's measurements of 9 to 10 inches entire length, and tails of 4 inches to 4 inches and 4 lines, apparently are based on the London scale in use today. If Tschudi employed the Rhine scale also of eight lines to the inch, but one which has the foot longer by an amount of 20 millimeters, or the Leipzig scale in which the foot is 22 millimeters shorter than the London foot, the measurements recorded by Tschudi differ in one direction or the other from those computed by Allen. However, knowledge of which scale Tschudi employed would not help much, if any, in more precise application of the nameagilisbecause he does not indicate whether his measurements are of male or female animals; animals of the two sexes of the same subspecies differ more in external measurements than animals of the same sex of different subspecies of Peruvian weasels.
Specimen no. 565, in the Polish Museum of Natural History, without definite locality, is provisionally referred to this subspecies. The specimen is intermediate in several respects between the female from Macate and the one ofmacrurafrom Cutervo.
Tschudi (1844:111-112) has given the following account: "Lebensweise und geographische Verbreitung. Das peruanische Wiesel lebt auf den kalten, öden Hochebenen der Cordillera an sonnigen Steinhaufen und Felsen gewöhnlich in Gesellschaft von 8-12 Stücken. Diese Thierchen sind so ausserordentlich behende und scheu, dass bei dem leisesten Geräusche die ganze Schaar mit Blitzesschnelle verschwindet. Es ist uns auch nie gelungen, eines derselben zu erlegen. Die Indianer aber verstehen es, dieselben lebendig einzufangen und zu zähmen. Ein sehr zahmes sahen wir bei einer uns befreundeten Dame in Tarma; gegen alle Fremden biss es mit Wuth und liess sich nicht anfassen, während es sich von seiner Herrin Alles gefallen liess; sie öffnete ihm den Mund und steckte ihm den Finger hinein, ohne dass es eine böse Miene dazu machte, während es bei der geringsten Bewegung, die wir machten, es zu ergreifen, grimmig auf uns lossprang. Wenn es eingeschüchtert wurde, versteckte es sich in den Busen seiner Gebieterin und kroch ihr bald nachher zum Aermel heraus. An den Wänden und Meublen kletterte es mit grosser Behendigkeit und schlüpfte durch so kleine Ritzen und Löcher, dass wir fast an der Möglichkeit dieses Hindurchdringens gezweifelt haben würden, wenn wir es nicht selbst mit angesehen hätten. Wenn es unartig war, wurde es mit einer Schnur an seinem kleinen Halsbande festgebunden; dadurch vermehrte sich sein Zorn, so dass es zuweilen gegen die Dame auffuhr. Mehrmals verschwand es während 8-10 Tagen und kam dann plötzlich wieder zum Vorschein. Seine Nahrung bestand in Gemüse und Fleisch, besonders aber liebte es Zuckerbrod in Milch aufgeweicht; einmal machte es sich an einen Kanarienvogel, den es auch tödtete. Es erhielt seine Strafe und verschwand dann für immer. Die Indianer sollen dieses Wiesel zum Fange der Viscacha abrichten (davon weiter unten). Sie nennen es Comadreja, auch Ardilla. ([footnote] Ardilla ist spanisch und heisst Eichhörnchen. Mit diesem Namen werden sehr verschiedene Thiere bezeichnet; ausser dem Sc. variabilis und der Galictis agilis auch noch mehrere Nager und einige Didelphysarten.) Die Indianerinnen verfertigen sich aus dem kleinen Felle Geldbeutel. Des Sonntags trifft man unter den vielen tausend Punaindianerinnen die nach den grossen Dörfern der Sierra kommen, um ihre Einkäufe zu machen, kaum ein halbes Dutzend, die nicht solche Börsen mit sich führten, und dann kann man auch die verschiedensten Farbennuancen, die bei dieser Species vorkommen, beobachten."
Tschudi (1844:111-112) has given the following account: "Lebensweise und geographische Verbreitung. Das peruanische Wiesel lebt auf den kalten, öden Hochebenen der Cordillera an sonnigen Steinhaufen und Felsen gewöhnlich in Gesellschaft von 8-12 Stücken. Diese Thierchen sind so ausserordentlich behende und scheu, dass bei dem leisesten Geräusche die ganze Schaar mit Blitzesschnelle verschwindet. Es ist uns auch nie gelungen, eines derselben zu erlegen. Die Indianer aber verstehen es, dieselben lebendig einzufangen und zu zähmen. Ein sehr zahmes sahen wir bei einer uns befreundeten Dame in Tarma; gegen alle Fremden biss es mit Wuth und liess sich nicht anfassen, während es sich von seiner Herrin Alles gefallen liess; sie öffnete ihm den Mund und steckte ihm den Finger hinein, ohne dass es eine böse Miene dazu machte, während es bei der geringsten Bewegung, die wir machten, es zu ergreifen, grimmig auf uns lossprang. Wenn es eingeschüchtert wurde, versteckte es sich in den Busen seiner Gebieterin und kroch ihr bald nachher zum Aermel heraus. An den Wänden und Meublen kletterte es mit grosser Behendigkeit und schlüpfte durch so kleine Ritzen und Löcher, dass wir fast an der Möglichkeit dieses Hindurchdringens gezweifelt haben würden, wenn wir es nicht selbst mit angesehen hätten. Wenn es unartig war, wurde es mit einer Schnur an seinem kleinen Halsbande festgebunden; dadurch vermehrte sich sein Zorn, so dass es zuweilen gegen die Dame auffuhr. Mehrmals verschwand es während 8-10 Tagen und kam dann plötzlich wieder zum Vorschein. Seine Nahrung bestand in Gemüse und Fleisch, besonders aber liebte es Zuckerbrod in Milch aufgeweicht; einmal machte es sich an einen Kanarienvogel, den es auch tödtete. Es erhielt seine Strafe und verschwand dann für immer. Die Indianer sollen dieses Wiesel zum Fange der Viscacha abrichten (davon weiter unten). Sie nennen es Comadreja, auch Ardilla. ([footnote] Ardilla ist spanisch und heisst Eichhörnchen. Mit diesem Namen werden sehr verschiedene Thiere bezeichnet; ausser dem Sc. variabilis und der Galictis agilis auch noch mehrere Nager und einige Didelphysarten.) Die Indianerinnen verfertigen sich aus dem kleinen Felle Geldbeutel. Des Sonntags trifft man unter den vielen tausend Punaindianerinnen die nach den grossen Dörfern der Sierra kommen, um ihre Einkäufe zu machen, kaum ein halbes Dutzend, die nicht solche Börsen mit sich führten, und dann kann man auch die verschiedensten Farbennuancen, die bei dieser Species vorkommen, beobachten."
None of the three skulls referred to this subspecies shows infestation of the frontal sinuses by parasites.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 4.Perú: Macate, 1 (Field Mus. Nat. Hist.); Huarochirí, 1 (Mus. Comp. Zool.); Lima, 1 (British Mus. Nat. Hist.); no locality more definite than Perú, 1 (Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat.).
Specimens examined.—Total number, 4.
Perú: Macate, 1 (Field Mus. Nat. Hist.); Huarochirí, 1 (Mus. Comp. Zool.); Lima, 1 (British Mus. Nat. Hist.); no locality more definite than Perú, 1 (Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat.).
Long-tailed Weasel
Plates1,27,28,29,30,37,38,39and40
Mustela macruraTaczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1874:311, pl. 48, May 19, 1874;ibid., 1881:647, May 17, 1881;ibid., 835, November 15, 1881; Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 8 (no. 1):21, 1913 (?); Hollister, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 28:143, July 10, 1914; Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:101, April 28, 1916; Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 14 (no. 4):11, 1921.Putorius (Gale) braziliensis frenatus, Coues, Fur-bearing animals, p. 142, 1877.Mustela jelskiiTaczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1881:647, May 17, 1881.Mustela affinis, Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 8 (no. 1):21, July 12, 1913.Mustela aureoventris, Thomas, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 58:224, 1920.Mustela frenata macrura, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939.
Mustela macruraTaczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1874:311, pl. 48, May 19, 1874;ibid., 1881:647, May 17, 1881;ibid., 835, November 15, 1881; Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 8 (no. 1):21, 1913 (?); Hollister, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 28:143, July 10, 1914; Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 35:101, April 28, 1916; Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 14 (no. 4):11, 1921.
Putorius (Gale) braziliensis frenatus, Coues, Fur-bearing animals, p. 142, 1877.
Mustela jelskiiTaczanowski, Proc. Zoöl. Soc. London, 1881:647, May 17, 1881.
Mustela affinis, Lönnberg, Arkiv för Zool., 8 (no. 1):21, July 12, 1913.
Mustela aureoventris, Thomas, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 58:224, 1920.
Mustela frenata macrura, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939.
Type.—Male, adult, mounted skin, with skull separate; no. 561, Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat. (Warsaw, Poland); Lake Junín, central Perú; 1873; obtained by M. Jelski.The skull (plates27-29,30), mounted with the skin but removed by me for study, lacks the right jugal, the basisphenoid, the basioccipital and parts of each exoccipital bearing the exoccipital condyles. The right tympanic bulla, although detached from the skull, is preserved separately. The teeth all are present and entire. The skin is fairly-well mounted, in a good state of preservation, and shows no fading due to exposure to light.Range.—Altitudinally, 3200 (Guainche) to at least 12000 feet (Pichincha); Upper Subtropical and Temperate life-zones of central Perú and Ecuador north from the states of Apurimac and Cuzco, Perú, to San Antonio, northern Ecuador. See figure29on page221.Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela africana stolzmanniby absence of median, longitudinal, abdominal stripe of same color as upper parts; presence of p2 and two roots rather than one root on P2; fromMustela frenata helleri,M. f. affinisandM. f. aureoventrisby lighter color of upper parts which are Chocolate tone 3, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay, whereas, with reference to the same color standard, the colors are: inhelleri, Carbon Brown, tone 3, pl. 342; inaffinis, Reddish Black, tone 2, pl. 344; inaureoventris, Reddish Black, tone 4, pl. 344; fromM. f. agilisby darker color (Chocolate, tone 3 rather than 2, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) of upper parts, length of upper tooth-rows, in females, more than 13, inside length of P4 more than 4.6; fromM. f. boliviensisby lighter color of upper parts which are as above rather than tone 4 of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 of Oberthür and Dauthenay, and larger size (in males, hind foot more than 45 and m1 more than 5.6).Description.—Size.—Male (measurements as recorded by Taczanowski in the original description, for two specimens, type and topotype, with correction of the length of tail of his "female" [= male]): Total length, 420, 415; length of tail, 150, 145; length of hind foot, 51, 51. An adult from Yana Mayo, Río Tarma, was measured by Hendee as 394, 134. Hind foot relaxed measures, 47. Tail 55 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot more than basal length.Female (based on measurements given by Taczanowski (1881:647) of no. 564): Total length, 323; length of tail, 120; length of hind foot, 37. Tail 59 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot approximately equal to basal length.Differences in external measurements of the two sexes are: Total length, 87; length of tail, 23; length of hind foot, 13.Externals.—Longest facial vibrissae extending beyond ear; carpal vibrissae color of either upper parts or underparts; hairiness of foot-soles as shown in figure20.Color.—(Based on specimens from Cutervo and south thereof). Rarely few white hairs between eyes and in front of ears; top of head posteriorly to slightly behind eyes, near (n) Chestnut-Brown (Ridgway) and Carbon Brown, tone 2 or darker (pl. 342, Oberthür and Dauthenay); posterior half of upper lip rarely white; dark spots at angles of mouth absent; tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (l) Russet (Ridgway) and Chocolate, tone 3 (pl. 343, Ober. and Dauth.); underparts white or whitish on medial sides of forelegs, otherwise cream color with tinge of Ochraceous-Buff; color of underparts extended distally on posterior sides of forelegs to just below elbow (in type specimen) or onto forefeet (in specimen from Yana Mayo) and on medial sides of hind legs to points between knees and ankles. Least width of color of underparts averages (in six skins) 17 (14-21) per cent of greatest width of color of upper parts. Black tip of tail longer than hind foot and averaging 36 (32-49) per cent of length of tail-vertebrae.Skull and teeth.—Male (based on type specimen and no. 562): See measurements and plates27-30; weight, not known; basilar length, 43.2 (40.8 and 45.5); zygomatic breadth more or less than distance between condylar foramen and M1 and more than that between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; mastoid breadth more or less than postpalatal length; postorbital breadth more than length of upper premolars and greater than width of basioccipital, measured from medial margin of one foramen lacerum posterior to its opposite; interorbital breadth more than distance between foramen opticum and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; breadth of rostrum less than length of tympanic bulla; least width of palate more than inside length of P4; anterior margin of tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 4 (including I3) upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla not more than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla more than length of lower molar and premolar tooth-row and longer or shorter than rostrum; anterior margin of masseteric fossa below or behind m2.Female (based on no. 564, from Cutervo, Perú, type specimen ofMustela jelskiiTaczanowski): See measurements and plates37-40; weight, not known; basilar length, 38±; zygomatic breadth less than distance between condylar foramen and M1 and not greater than that between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; postorbital breadth more than alveolar length of upper premolars and (probably) more than width of basioccipital measured from medial margin of one foramen lacerum posterior to its opposite; least width of palate more than inside length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of at least 5-1/2 upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla less than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla more than length of lower molar and premolar tooth-row and longer or shorter than rostrum.
Type.—Male, adult, mounted skin, with skull separate; no. 561, Mus. Polonais d'Hist. Nat. (Warsaw, Poland); Lake Junín, central Perú; 1873; obtained by M. Jelski.
The skull (plates27-29,30), mounted with the skin but removed by me for study, lacks the right jugal, the basisphenoid, the basioccipital and parts of each exoccipital bearing the exoccipital condyles. The right tympanic bulla, although detached from the skull, is preserved separately. The teeth all are present and entire. The skin is fairly-well mounted, in a good state of preservation, and shows no fading due to exposure to light.
Range.—Altitudinally, 3200 (Guainche) to at least 12000 feet (Pichincha); Upper Subtropical and Temperate life-zones of central Perú and Ecuador north from the states of Apurimac and Cuzco, Perú, to San Antonio, northern Ecuador. See figure29on page221.
Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela africana stolzmanniby absence of median, longitudinal, abdominal stripe of same color as upper parts; presence of p2 and two roots rather than one root on P2; fromMustela frenata helleri,M. f. affinisandM. f. aureoventrisby lighter color of upper parts which are Chocolate tone 3, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay, whereas, with reference to the same color standard, the colors are: inhelleri, Carbon Brown, tone 3, pl. 342; inaffinis, Reddish Black, tone 2, pl. 344; inaureoventris, Reddish Black, tone 4, pl. 344; fromM. f. agilisby darker color (Chocolate, tone 3 rather than 2, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) of upper parts, length of upper tooth-rows, in females, more than 13, inside length of P4 more than 4.6; fromM. f. boliviensisby lighter color of upper parts which are as above rather than tone 4 of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 of Oberthür and Dauthenay, and larger size (in males, hind foot more than 45 and m1 more than 5.6).
Description.—Size.—Male (measurements as recorded by Taczanowski in the original description, for two specimens, type and topotype, with correction of the length of tail of his "female" [= male]): Total length, 420, 415; length of tail, 150, 145; length of hind foot, 51, 51. An adult from Yana Mayo, Río Tarma, was measured by Hendee as 394, 134. Hind foot relaxed measures, 47. Tail 55 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot more than basal length.
Female (based on measurements given by Taczanowski (1881:647) of no. 564): Total length, 323; length of tail, 120; length of hind foot, 37. Tail 59 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot approximately equal to basal length.
Differences in external measurements of the two sexes are: Total length, 87; length of tail, 23; length of hind foot, 13.
Externals.—Longest facial vibrissae extending beyond ear; carpal vibrissae color of either upper parts or underparts; hairiness of foot-soles as shown in figure20.
Color.—(Based on specimens from Cutervo and south thereof). Rarely few white hairs between eyes and in front of ears; top of head posteriorly to slightly behind eyes, near (n) Chestnut-Brown (Ridgway) and Carbon Brown, tone 2 or darker (pl. 342, Oberthür and Dauthenay); posterior half of upper lip rarely white; dark spots at angles of mouth absent; tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (l) Russet (Ridgway) and Chocolate, tone 3 (pl. 343, Ober. and Dauth.); underparts white or whitish on medial sides of forelegs, otherwise cream color with tinge of Ochraceous-Buff; color of underparts extended distally on posterior sides of forelegs to just below elbow (in type specimen) or onto forefeet (in specimen from Yana Mayo) and on medial sides of hind legs to points between knees and ankles. Least width of color of underparts averages (in six skins) 17 (14-21) per cent of greatest width of color of upper parts. Black tip of tail longer than hind foot and averaging 36 (32-49) per cent of length of tail-vertebrae.
Skull and teeth.—Male (based on type specimen and no. 562): See measurements and plates27-30; weight, not known; basilar length, 43.2 (40.8 and 45.5); zygomatic breadth more or less than distance between condylar foramen and M1 and more than that between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; mastoid breadth more or less than postpalatal length; postorbital breadth more than length of upper premolars and greater than width of basioccipital, measured from medial margin of one foramen lacerum posterior to its opposite; interorbital breadth more than distance between foramen opticum and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; breadth of rostrum less than length of tympanic bulla; least width of palate more than inside length of P4; anterior margin of tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 4 (including I3) upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla not more than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla more than length of lower molar and premolar tooth-row and longer or shorter than rostrum; anterior margin of masseteric fossa below or behind m2.
Female (based on no. 564, from Cutervo, Perú, type specimen ofMustela jelskiiTaczanowski): See measurements and plates37-40; weight, not known; basilar length, 38±; zygomatic breadth less than distance between condylar foramen and M1 and not greater than that between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; postorbital breadth more than alveolar length of upper premolars and (probably) more than width of basioccipital measured from medial margin of one foramen lacerum posterior to its opposite; least width of palate more than inside length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of at least 5-1/2 upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla less than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla more than length of lower molar and premolar tooth-row and longer or shorter than rostrum.
As compared with that ofhelleri, the skull of the male ofmacrurafrom Junín southward has a lesser mastoid breadth, notably smaller teeth, and a flatter skull which averages lighter throughout. The skulls of females available indicate that the skull and teeth are larger than inagilis.
Remarks.—Seven years after Taczanowski named this subspecies, he applied the namejelskiito a female taken farther north than the original examples ofmacrura. As indicated in synonymy, various other names have been applied to animals included by the present author in this subspecies.
Mustela frenata macruraintergrades withM. f. affinisas shown by practically all the referred specimens from north of Junín. As one proceeds northward the color of the weasels becomes progressively darker and the teeth become larger until the conditions found inaffinisare met with near the northern border of Ecuador. From the material available it appears that the light-colored upper parts found inmacruracharacterize weasels of, at least, the Temperate Zone, from Marcapata, Perú, to near Quito, Ecuador. West of the range ofmacrurathere exists the still lighter-colored subspecies,M. f. agilis. Immediately adjacent on the north, east, and south, darker-colored weasels occur. So far as color is concerned, the geographic range of the subspeciesM. f. macrurais not difficult to define. However, the small size of the teeth characterizes only that part of this light-colored subspecies from Junín southward including the subspeciesboliviensisat the southern extremity of the range of the species. From Cutervo northward the light-colored weasels of the Temperate Zone have teeth similar in size to those of the darker, more northernaffinis. To designate the slightly larger-toothed, light-colored animals from Ecuador as a subspecies distinct fromaffinisandmacrurais one solution but at present it seems best to refer all of these light-colored animals tomacrura.
The type specimen and topotype no. 562 differ more in the amount of inflation of the tympanic bullae than adult males of comparable ages from a given locality usually do. In other respects, the differences between the two skulls are not greater than those ordinarily found in specimens from the same locality. No. 562 has the tympanic bullae greatly, relative to the other South American weasels, inflated posteriorly. Otherwise, the bullae agree with those of the type specimen.
Specimens from southwestern Ecuador, average large, and include the largest specimens of the speciesMustela frenataseen from South America. A subadult male, no. 61406, in the American Museum of Natural History, is the largest. Its external measurements are 482, 191, 56. The basilar length of the skull is 48.2 and the zygomatic breadth is 30.3. Although not so large as this specimen, the corresponding measurements of specimens from Alamor, El Chiral, and even from as far away as Sigsig also are distinctly large.
The skull of the female from Ollantaytambo and that of the male from Marcapata have teeth equally as small as do the specimens from Lake Junín.
The skin alone, no. 194328, from Ollantaytambo has the color of the underparts extended over the entire upper sides of the forefeet. The male from Marcapata has less of this color on the forefeet and is in this respect intermediate between the specimens from Lake Junín and the one from Ollantaytambo.
In size of teeth the female, type specimen ofM. jelskii, from Cutervo, shows an approach to the larger-toothed weasels of the northern part of the range ofmacrura.
The specimens in the Riksmuseum from the vicinity of Quito, Ecuador, have been rather fully described by Lönnberg (1921:11-17) and need little comment here, except to say that they show, as he suggested, that the weasel of the Temperate Zone of Ecuador is an intermediate link betweenM. f. macruraandM. f. affinis.
The adult female and juvenal male labeled as from Ambato have little left of the skulls except some of the teeth and the assignment of the specimens to the subspeciesmacrurais made mainly on geographic grounds. These two specimens probably are part of the shipment of birds and mammals of which Chapman (1926:703) speaks as follows: "A small collection of native-made skins purchased by the American Museum from a commission merchant in New York City as from 'Ambato' proved to be from the eastern slope of the Andes." Another skin in the same Museum, labeled by a native collector as from "Baeza arriba" [= above Baeza] is so dark colored and has the color of the underparts so much restricted, as to suggest that it belongs to the raceaureoventris. Possibly, therefore, it was taken not at Baeza, Ecuador, which I find to the eastward of Quito at 77° 55' W and O° 25' S, but at some place of the same name on the Pacific Slope, unless the locality has been altogether wrongly recorded on the label. If the specimen was taken near the Baeza above referred to, then it gives evidence of an unnamed race ofMustelaon the eastern slope of the Andes, characterized by its dark color. Unfortunately the specimen is young and its skull therefore offers insufficient basis for the judging of its subspecific relationships.
Other specimens, in the British Museum of Natural History, recorded as taken "near Quito" and here tentatively listed undermacrura, mostly, include specimens so dark colored as to lead me to think they came from country, lower than Quito, adjacent to the range ofaureoventris.
Nematodes taken from the right frontal sinus of no. 562 from Junín proved to belong to the superfamily Oxyuriodea according to Professor W. B. Herms and Mr. O. L. Williams, who have independently identified them. Because these worms had been dried fifty-five years in the mounted specimen and were later boiled in cleaning the skull, a more accurate determination was impossible and whether or not they pertain to the same species found in North American weasels cannot be said. Of 18 adult skulls examined for this type of infestation, 13 were found affected as judged by the evident malformation of the frontal region.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 74, arranged by localities from north to south and unless otherwise indicated in the American Museum of Natural History.Ecuador: Ibarra, 6600 ft., and 7500 ft., 2[7]; San Antonio, 8000-8500 ft., 5 mi. N Quito, 4 (2[7], 2[78]); Nono, 10000 ft., 1; Mindo, 1[78]; Zambiza, 8000-8100 ft., NE Quito, 4 (2[78], 2[95]); Carapungo, 8500 ft., NE Quito, 1[78]; Panecillo, 10000 ft., near Quito, 2[78]; Guapulo, 8800 ft., 3 mi. E of Quito, 1[78]; Pichincha, 10500 ft., and 12000 ft., 2 (1[78], 1[95]); San Ignacio, 11500 ft., Pichincha, 1; Santa Rosa, 9600 ft., Río Pita, 2; near Santa Rosa, 9000 ft., 1; Río San Rafel, 9000 ft., 1; N side Quito, 9000 ft., 1[78]; Quito, 1[4]; near Quito, 5[7]; Nára Papallacta, 11000 ft., 1[78]; below Papallacta, 9000 ft., 1[78]; Chillo Valley, 1[78]; "Hacienda Hda," 10000 ft., Pintag, Valencia, 1; Baeza arriba, 1; Ambato, 2; San Francisco, 8000 ft., E of Ambato, 1; Chunchí, Pagma Forest, 6400 ft., 1[1]; Canar, 2600 M., 1[7]; Malletura, 7600 ft., 1; Contrayerbas, 11000 ft., 1; Sisig, 8500 ft., 3[7]; El Chiral, 1; Almor, 1; Guainche, 3200 ft., 1; no locality more definite than Ecuador, 4[95]; "Received from Quito," 1[7]; Quisaya, 6000 ft. (locality not found), 1[7]; La Carolina (locality not found), 1[78].Perú: La Lejía, 1; Huancabamba, 4 (2[75]); Cutervo, 9000 ft., 1[73]; Condechacha, 7000 ft., Río Utcubamba, 1[7]; San Pedro, 8600-9400 ft., S of Chachapoyas, 1; Celendín, 1[7]; Junín, 2[73]; Yana Mayo, Río Tarma, 1[7]; Ollantaytambo, 9000 ft., 3 (1[7], 2[91]); Ocabamba, 1[7]; Anta Cuzco, 3400 and 3500 M., 2[4]; Marcapata, 1[91].
Specimens examined.—Total number, 74, arranged by localities from north to south and unless otherwise indicated in the American Museum of Natural History.
Ecuador: Ibarra, 6600 ft., and 7500 ft., 2[7]; San Antonio, 8000-8500 ft., 5 mi. N Quito, 4 (2[7], 2[78]); Nono, 10000 ft., 1; Mindo, 1[78]; Zambiza, 8000-8100 ft., NE Quito, 4 (2[78], 2[95]); Carapungo, 8500 ft., NE Quito, 1[78]; Panecillo, 10000 ft., near Quito, 2[78]; Guapulo, 8800 ft., 3 mi. E of Quito, 1[78]; Pichincha, 10500 ft., and 12000 ft., 2 (1[78], 1[95]); San Ignacio, 11500 ft., Pichincha, 1; Santa Rosa, 9600 ft., Río Pita, 2; near Santa Rosa, 9000 ft., 1; Río San Rafel, 9000 ft., 1; N side Quito, 9000 ft., 1[78]; Quito, 1[4]; near Quito, 5[7]; Nára Papallacta, 11000 ft., 1[78]; below Papallacta, 9000 ft., 1[78]; Chillo Valley, 1[78]; "Hacienda Hda," 10000 ft., Pintag, Valencia, 1; Baeza arriba, 1; Ambato, 2; San Francisco, 8000 ft., E of Ambato, 1; Chunchí, Pagma Forest, 6400 ft., 1[1]; Canar, 2600 M., 1[7]; Malletura, 7600 ft., 1; Contrayerbas, 11000 ft., 1; Sisig, 8500 ft., 3[7]; El Chiral, 1; Almor, 1; Guainche, 3200 ft., 1; no locality more definite than Ecuador, 4[95]; "Received from Quito," 1[7]; Quisaya, 6000 ft. (locality not found), 1[7]; La Carolina (locality not found), 1[78].
Perú: La Lejía, 1; Huancabamba, 4 (2[75]); Cutervo, 9000 ft., 1[73]; Condechacha, 7000 ft., Río Utcubamba, 1[7]; San Pedro, 8600-9400 ft., S of Chachapoyas, 1; Celendín, 1[7]; Junín, 2[73]; Yana Mayo, Río Tarma, 1[7]; Ollantaytambo, 9000 ft., 3 (1[7], 2[91]); Ocabamba, 1[7]; Anta Cuzco, 3400 and 3500 M., 2[4]; Marcapata, 1[91].
Long-tailed Weasel
Plates28,29and30
Mustela frenata boliviensisHall, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 51:67, March 18, 1938.Mustela frenata macrura, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939 (part).
Mustela frenata boliviensisHall, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 51:67, March 18, 1938.
Mustela frenata macrura, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:110, November 20, 1936; Hall, Physis, 16:176, 1939 (part).
Type.—Male, adult, skull and skin; no. 72587, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; Nequejahuira, 8000 feet, Bolivia; May 19, 1926; obtained by G. H. H. Tate; original no. 4135 (see plates28-30).Range.—As now known 8000 to 9500 feet in the Andes from Limbaní, Perú, south to Nequejahuira, Bolivia; upper Subtropical and Temperate life-zones. See figure29on page221.Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela africana stolzmanniby absence of median, longitudinal, abdominal stripe of same color as upper parts; presence of p2 and two roots rather than one root on P2; fromMustela frenata macruraby darker color of upper parts (tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 rather than tone 3 of Chocolate, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) and lesser size (in males hind foot less than 45 and m1 less than 5.6); fromMustela frenata agilisby darker color of upper parts (as given above rather than tone 2 of Chocolate, pl. 343, of Oberthür and Dauthenay).Description.—Size.—Male: The type and two young specimens from Limbaní, Perú, measure respectively, as follows: Total length, 383, 368, 304; length of tail, 140, 132, 115; length of hind foot, 43, 44, 41. Tail 55 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot approximately equal to basal length.Female: Unknown.Externals.—As described inMustela frenata macrura.Color.—Top of head blackish posteriorly to behind ears; upper lips same color as upper parts of head; dark area at angle of mouth not separated from upper parts as a distinct spot; tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (n) Mars Brown of Ridgway and tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown (pl. 342, Oberthür and Dauthenay); underparts Cream-Colored with strong wash of Ochraceous-Buff; whitish on insides of forelegs to just below elbow; color of underparts extended distally on forelegs over ankles onto antipalmar faces of inner toes, and on hind legs to knees. Least width of color of underparts averages 15 (11-19) per cent of greatest width of color of upper parts. Black tip of tail in type longer than hind foot and amounting to 36 per cent of length of tail-vertebrae.Skull and teeth.—Male (based on the type): See measurements and plates28-30. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight, 2.8 grams; basilar length, 41.6; zygomatic breadth less than distance between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; anterior margin of tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 5 upper incisors.Female: Skull unknown.
Type.—Male, adult, skull and skin; no. 72587, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; Nequejahuira, 8000 feet, Bolivia; May 19, 1926; obtained by G. H. H. Tate; original no. 4135 (see plates28-30).
Range.—As now known 8000 to 9500 feet in the Andes from Limbaní, Perú, south to Nequejahuira, Bolivia; upper Subtropical and Temperate life-zones. See figure29on page221.
Characters for ready recognition.—Differs fromMustela africana stolzmanniby absence of median, longitudinal, abdominal stripe of same color as upper parts; presence of p2 and two roots rather than one root on P2; fromMustela frenata macruraby darker color of upper parts (tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown, pl. 342 rather than tone 3 of Chocolate, pl. 343, Oberthür and Dauthenay) and lesser size (in males hind foot less than 45 and m1 less than 5.6); fromMustela frenata agilisby darker color of upper parts (as given above rather than tone 2 of Chocolate, pl. 343, of Oberthür and Dauthenay).
Description.—Size.—Male: The type and two young specimens from Limbaní, Perú, measure respectively, as follows: Total length, 383, 368, 304; length of tail, 140, 132, 115; length of hind foot, 43, 44, 41. Tail 55 per cent as long as head and body. Length of hind foot approximately equal to basal length.
Female: Unknown.
Externals.—As described inMustela frenata macrura.
Color.—Top of head blackish posteriorly to behind ears; upper lips same color as upper parts of head; dark area at angle of mouth not separated from upper parts as a distinct spot; tip of tail black; remainder of upper parts near (n) Mars Brown of Ridgway and tone 4 or darker of Carbon Brown (pl. 342, Oberthür and Dauthenay); underparts Cream-Colored with strong wash of Ochraceous-Buff; whitish on insides of forelegs to just below elbow; color of underparts extended distally on forelegs over ankles onto antipalmar faces of inner toes, and on hind legs to knees. Least width of color of underparts averages 15 (11-19) per cent of greatest width of color of upper parts. Black tip of tail in type longer than hind foot and amounting to 36 per cent of length of tail-vertebrae.
Skull and teeth.—Male (based on the type): See measurements and plates28-30. As described inMustela frenata macruraexcept that: Weight, 2.8 grams; basilar length, 41.6; zygomatic breadth less than distance between anterior palatine foramen and anterior margin of tympanic bulla; anterior margin of tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 5 upper incisors.
Female: Skull unknown.
Remarks.—Apparently the first specimens of this race to find their way into a zoölogical collection were the two young males taken on February 17, 1904, at Limbaní, by Geo. Ockenden [sic.].
M. f. boliviensisis smaller than any other South American weasel except possiblyagilis. Better material of the two races probably will show evenagilisto be larger.
Early in my study ofMustelaafter examination of the one young specimen, from Limbaní, in the United States National Museum, an account of this race was drawn up, but the account was discarded for want of satisfactory material and the animal was referred tomacrura. Then, in 1937, when the two other specimens were studied, the race was formally characterized as different from previously recognized kinds.
The collector has noted on the labels of the two young from Limbaní that they were shot in the afternoon when running together beneath bushes. The frontal sinuses of the type are malformed as a result of infestation by parasites.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 3, as follows:Perú: Carabaya, Limbaní, 2 (one in U. S. Nat. Mus. and one in Berlin Zool. Mus.).Bolivia: Nequejahuira, 1 Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.
Specimens examined.—Total number, 3, as follows:
Perú: Carabaya, Limbaní, 2 (one in U. S. Nat. Mus. and one in Berlin Zool. Mus.).
Bolivia: Nequejahuira, 1 Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.
Plates39and40
Putorius gracilisBrown, Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 9(pt. 4):182, pl. 17, 1908.Mustela gracilis, Hay, Iowa Geol. Surv. Bull., 23:32, 1914; Hay, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 322A:252, October 15, 1924; Hay, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 390(vol. 2):528, 1930.Mustela frenata gracilis, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:112, November 20, 1936.
Putorius gracilisBrown, Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 9(pt. 4):182, pl. 17, 1908.
Mustela gracilis, Hay, Iowa Geol. Surv. Bull., 23:32, 1914; Hay, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 322A:252, October 15, 1924; Hay, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 390(vol. 2):528, 1930.
Mustela frenata gracilis, Hall, Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ. 473:112, November 20, 1936.
Type.—Adult skull without lower jaws, probably of a female, no. 12431, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; from Conard Fissure, four miles west of Willcockson, Newton County, Arkansas; obtained sometime in the period 1903 to 1905 inclusive. (See plates39and40.)Range.—Known only from the Pleistocene deposit in Conard Fissure, at the type locality in northern Arkansas.Description.—Skull.Probably female (based on the type): See measurements and plates39and40; weight unknown; basilar length, 38.1; least width of palate less than greatest length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 3 to 5 upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla less than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla less than length of rostrum.
Type.—Adult skull without lower jaws, probably of a female, no. 12431, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; from Conard Fissure, four miles west of Willcockson, Newton County, Arkansas; obtained sometime in the period 1903 to 1905 inclusive. (See plates39and40.)
Range.—Known only from the Pleistocene deposit in Conard Fissure, at the type locality in northern Arkansas.
Description.—Skull.Probably female (based on the type): See measurements and plates39and40; weight unknown; basilar length, 38.1; least width of palate less than greatest length of P4; tympanic bulla as far posterior to foramen ovale as width of 3 to 5 upper incisors; height of tympanic bulla less than distance from its anterior margin to foramen ovale; length of tympanic bulla less than length of rostrum.
Comparison and remarks.—The type specimen was the only individual referred by Brown (1908) to this species. The remaining material of weasels from this deposit was referred by Brown to hisPutorius cicognanii angustidens. Examination of the original materials convinces the writer, too, that the specimens, except no. 12431,areof the specieserminea[=cicognaniiof Brown]. No. 12431 itself may possibly beermineabut is far more probably of the speciesfrenata. The uncertainty is due to the fact that an occasional skull alone of a subadult maleermineais extremely difficult certainly to distinguish from a skull alone of an adult femalefrenata. This is true among Recent specimens in the northern Mississippi Valley today; more exactly in Iowa and southern Minnesota the females offrenata, oftentimes intergrades between the subspeciesMustela frenata longicauda,M. f. noveboracensisandM. f. primulina, by only the skulls are next to indistinguishable from certain, unusually slender skulls of maleerminea. At other places where the ranges of the two species meet, this difficulty is not so often encountered. Also, the type ofgracilishas the skull broken in such a way that the postglenoid length in relation to the length of the skull as a whole could not be accurately determined in this particular skull.
The type specimen ofgracilissurely is an adult and because of its small size is thought to be a female. Of known long-tailed weasels of the speciesfrenata,gracilisis structurally nearest toM. f. primulinawhich occurs in the same region today and toM. f. noveboracensis, the long-tailed weasel of the eastern United States.M. gracilisdiffers fromnoveboracensisand agrees withprimulinain possessing well-marked temporal ridges which fuse to form a low sagittal crest, in having the mastoid processes projecting farther, laterally, beyond the braincase, in having the anterior ends of the tympanic bullae produced below the squamosal rather than on the same plane with the squamosal, and in having the bullae more inflated anteromedially.M. gracilisdiffers from bothnoveboracensis(97 ♂ and 56 ♀ with skulls of comparable age) andprimulina(64 ♂ and 24 ♀ with skulls of comparable age) in that the zygomatic breadth amounts to less than 58 per cent of the basilar length. Another difference from any one of the skulls of females ofprimulinais the longer rostrum, which, when measured from the posterior base of the postorbital process of the frontal to the anterior end of the nasal on the same side, amounts to more than 35 per cent of the basilar length. As pointed out by Brown (1908:182) this specimen represents the extreme of slender skull among known kinds of American weasels.
Selected measurements of no. 12431, the type specimen ofMustela gracilis, are as follows: Basilar length of Hensel, 38.1 mm.; length of upper tooth-rows, 14.3 to 14.4; breadth of rostrum, 11.0; interorbital breadth, 8.5; orbitonasal length, 13.6; mastoid breadth, 18.2; length of tympanic bulla, 13.0; breadth of tympanic bulla, 6.3; depth of tympanic bulla, 3.25; outside length of P4, 4.5; inside length of P4, 4.7; breadth of M1, 3.4; length of inner moiety of M1, 1.8; depth of skull at anterior margin of basioccipital, 12.2; depth of skull at posterior borders of last upper molars, 11.3; distance from foramen ovale to tympanic bulla, 3.6 mm.
Selected measurements of no. 12431, the type specimen ofMustela gracilis, are as follows: Basilar length of Hensel, 38.1 mm.; length of upper tooth-rows, 14.3 to 14.4; breadth of rostrum, 11.0; interorbital breadth, 8.5; orbitonasal length, 13.6; mastoid breadth, 18.2; length of tympanic bulla, 13.0; breadth of tympanic bulla, 6.3; depth of tympanic bulla, 3.25; outside length of P4, 4.5; inside length of P4, 4.7; breadth of M1, 3.4; length of inner moiety of M1, 1.8; depth of skull at anterior margin of basioccipital, 12.2; depth of skull at posterior borders of last upper molars, 11.3; distance from foramen ovale to tympanic bulla, 3.6 mm.